They also want nations to phase out thermal coal-based electricity generation
Photographer: David Gray/Bloomberg
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DWS Group, Legal and General Investment Management and Pacific Investment Management Co. were among 457 investors that wrote a joint letter to heads of state ahead of the Group of Seven leaders summit that will start on Friday in Cornwall, England.
The money managers requested all governments commit to net zero emissions by mid-century, increase their 2030 emissions reductions targets in line with limiting global warming to 1.5° Celcius, remove fossil fuel subsidies and phase out thermal coal-based electricity generation.
Climate change will be a key topic of conversation at the G-7 event, which is being held five months ahead of the United Nations climate conference in Glasgow where signatories of the 2015 Paris climate accord are expected to review their promises to cut emissions and set more ambitious goals.
The coalition argues that countries that move swiftly to decarbonize and prepare for a future less dependent on fossil fuels are also likely to attract more capital.
“Those who set ambitious targets in line with achieving net-zero emissions, and implement consistent national climate policies in the short-to-medium term, will become increasingly attractive investment destinations,” the investors wrote.
“Full implementation of the Paris Agreement will create significant investment opportunities in clean technologies, green infrastructure and other assets, products and services needed in this new economy.”
The investor coalition, which also includes Amundi SA and Fidelity International, also called for Covid-19 economic recovery plans to support the transition to net-zero emissions and for climate-related financial reporting to become mandatory.
“The world’s leading investors are making it crystal clear they expect governments to show they are committed to tackling the climate crisis,” said Stephanie Pfeifer, CEO of the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change.
“Those that fall short will increasingly be left behind as the race to a cleaner future gathers pace.”
Links
- Norway's $US1 Trillion Sovereign Wealth Fund To Dump Billions In Coal Investments
- Investors Managing $32 Trillion In Assets Call For Action On Climate Change
- Investors With $26 Trillion In Assets Urge G7 Leaders To Act On Climate Change
- (Australia Institute) Australian Manufacturing At Risk From Morrison Resistance To Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism At G7 Summit
- (AU Canberra Times) Scott Morrison And G7+ Leaders Implored To Act On Climate Change As 'Colossal' Risk To Humanity
- (Forbes) Climate Change Could Batter World’s Wealthiest Economies Twice As Badly As Covid, Oxfam Says
- (UK The Guardian) G7 Nations Committing Billions More To Fossil Fuel Than Green Energy
- (AU SBS) Australia Accused Of Being 'Out-Of-Step' On Climate As G7 Agrees To Stop International Funding For Coal
- (UK Financial Times) G7 Agrees To Stop Overseas Funding Of Coal To Limit Global Warming
- (AU The Guardian) Australia Stands Alone In Not Having A Significant Climate Plan, Says UK Expert
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